Financial Advisor Confidence Index Spikes In February

Prasad Thammineni

Friday, March 1st, 2013

Penton's WealthManagement.com Advisor Confidence Index (ACI), a benchmark of financial advisors' views on the U.S. economy and the stock market, rose by 8.4% in February 2013 to end at 109.7, the highest level it has been sinceApril 2012.

WealthManagement.com's Advisor Confidence Index (ACI) is a monthly benchmark with an eight-year history that gauges registered investment advisor (RIA) views on the U. S economy and the stock market. ACI data is compiled from a survey 300+ panel members that work at leading RIA firms who are prequalified for their industry experience and assets under management. The survey asks advisors for their views on the outlook for the economy now, in six months, in twelve months, and on the stock market.

February marks the third month in a row that the index has climbed higher, since suffering an 11% decline in November, reflecting uncertainty surrounding the election and the resolution of the fiscal cliff. Since then, markets have climbed 10% and advisor confidence has rebounded.

"Clearly, the U.S. economy is mending," says ACI panelist William Green of GL Capital Partners. "Home sales, employment and confidence all look stronger. Expect a few bumps or flare ups along the way, but the U.S. economy is forming a positive base. My outlook for 2013 and 2014 remains quite positive."

All four components of the ACI experienced an increase in confidence over the prior month:

  • Current economic outlook  + 5.2%
  • Six-month economic outlook  + 7.0%
  • 12-month economic outlook  + 18.0%
  • Stock market outlook  + 4.3%

Survey participants are clearly optimistic about the near-term future of the economy, but many think the recent market boom is being fueled more by federal stimulus spending than economic fundamentals. And while the near term may look positive, dangers lurk further out.

"As long as the Fed is artificially suppressing interest rates and treasury rates have seemed to hit bottom, money will flow to equities as it searches for yield," says ACI panelist Rick Horton of WealthPlan Advisors. "Once governments start down the road of printing money, they are like an addict and have a hard time giving it up. When the Fed announces that they no longer will suppress rates, then we should see a bubble of some sort in both the bond and equity markets. Probably won't happen for twenty four to thirty six months."